Getting Ready... is an album by the American musician Freddie King, released in 1971.[1][2] It was the first of three albums he recorded for Shelter Records.[3] The album contains "Going Down", which became one of King's most popular songs.[4] King supported Getting Ready... with a North American tour.[5]
The News-Chronicle noted that King "is only an average vocalist ... slurring some of the lines to the point of indistinction, but what you are able to hear is good."[20] The Reading Evening Post called the album "good solid blues that pushes along rather than rolls along."[21]The Arizona Republic praised King's vocals on "Key to the Highway".[11]
In 1989, the Los Angeles Times stated that the songs "provide a respectable showcase of King's feel for both rock and blues."[17] In 1997, Guitar Player said that "Freddie is comfortable and in total command".[8]The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings opined that the Shelter albums reflect "the awkward phase blues was going through in the early '70s."[22]
While the back cover of the original LP credits the songwriter of "Worried Life Blues" as "Big Maco" (which is likely a typo for Big Maceo) while the label on the record states the writer as Willie Dixon, and the song is stated as "Worry My Life No More".
"Tore Down" songwriter credit on the back cover is "Freddie King" while on the record label it is "Sonny Thompson" and the song is stated as "I'm Tore Down" on the latter. The original Federal single released in 1961 states the song as "I'm Tore Down" credited to "Sonny Thompson" thus the Freddie King credit likely is an error.
References
^Komara, Edward, ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of the Blues. Vol. 1. Taylor & Francis. p. 573.
^O'Neal, Jim; van Singel, Amy (2013). The Voice of the Blues: Classic Interviews from Living Blues Magazine. Taylor & Francis. p. 360.
^Fox, Darrin (August 2004). "Freddie King". Guitar Player. Vol. 38, no. 8. p. 186.
^ abMusicHound Blues: The Essential Album Guide. Visible Ink Press. 1998. p. 214.
^"Bluesman to Perform in Concert". The Bradenton Herald. August 3, 1971. p. 9A.
^Rudis, Al (August 14, 1971). "When Freddie King...". Pause. Buffalo Evening News. p. 29.
^Ellis, Bill (July 1, 2000). "Old Folks and Newcomers Give the Past Its Props". The Commercial Appeal. p. F8.
^ abcForte, Dan (October 1997). "The essential Freddie King collection". Guitar Player. Vol. 31, no. 10. p. 75.
^Thompson, Art (December 1998). "Legends of the Paul". Guitar Player. Vol. 32, no. 12. p. 117.
^McMahon, Peg (August 4, 1971). "Freddie King—Blues from Within". The Kansas City Star. p. 14A.
^ abPrice, Hardy (June 13, 1971). "Popular". The Arizona Republic. p. 8N.
^Friedland, Ed (April 2015). "The Eight-Bar Blues". Bass Player. Vol. 26, no. 4. p. 52.
^Bevan, Bev (November 24, 2024). "Albums of the Week". Weekend. Sunday Mercury. p. 3.
^"Special Merit Picks". Billboard. Vol. 83, no. 19. May 8, 1971. p. 42.
^Goins, Wayne Everett (2014). Blues All Day Long: The Jimmy Rogers Story. University of Illinois Press. p. 171.